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Africa’s Growth Problem Isn’t Capital; It’s Leadership without Collaboration (By Ray Langa)

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Langa

In this opinion piece, Langa challenges business leaders to confront why continental scale remains elusive despite abundant capital, talent and ambition

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, February 13, 2026/APO Group/ —By Ray Langa, Group Chief Executive of Leagas Delaney South Africa (www.LeagasDelaney.co.za) and Dark Arts Studio.

Africa doesn’t have a capital problem: it has a collaboration problem. For decades, we’ve convinced ourselves that more investment is the answer, but Ray Langa, Group Chief Executive of Leagas Delaney South Africa (www.LeagasDelaney.co.za), argues we’ve been asking the wrong question. The continent’s real constraint isn’t money but the leadership discipline we’ve yet to master: building together across borders. In this opinion piece, Langa challenges business leaders to confront why continental scale remains elusive despite abundant capital, talent and ambition.

For many years, Africa’s growth conversation has centred on capital, how much of it we lack, how little of it flows into the continent, and how dependent our future is on attracting more of it.

Capital matters. We all know that.

But perhaps we’ve also leaned on capital as an easier explanation than the one that asks more of us.

Because when we look honestly at where growth stalls across the continent, it increasingly feels as though Africa’s most binding constraint is not money, but how we lead together.

Across our markets, we see talent, ambition, creativity and resilience in abundance. Africa today holds significant domestic capital across pension funds, insurance pools and sovereign institutions. Yet true scale, regional, durable and repeatable remains rare.

That tension is worth sitting with. Not to assign blame, but to ask a harder question: what are we not doing collectively that no amount of capital can solve on its own?

When capital fragments, leadership is usually the reason

Capital tends to follow confidence, coordination and clarity. When those conditions exist, money accelerates progress. When they don’t, capital fragments, funding isolated successes instead of shared systems. Many of us have seen this first-hand.

Despite growing investment and ambition, intra-African trade still represents a small portion of our total trade compared to other regions. A continent with extraordinary proximity in challenges and opportunity continues to trade outward more than inward.

It’s tempting to blame infrastructure, regulation or history and undoubtedly all of these matter. But over time, it becomes harder to ignore the role leadership plays in maintaining fragmentation long after the reasons for it should have expired.

Not because Africa cannot collaborate but because collaboration has rarely been treated as a core leadership discipline.

Leadership that stops at borders limits scale

If we’re honest, many of us were taught to lead within boundaries: company lines, sector lines, national borders. Growth was framed outward to Europe, the UK or the US rather than across the continent.

And yet, paradoxically Africa’s most compelling opportunity is continental.

Shared demographics. Adjacent markets. Familiar consumer pressures. Complementary strengths. These conditions should make collaboration almost inevitable. Instead, they are often complicated by ego, fear, and a sense of scarcity that quietly shapes decision-making.

Strong leadership in Africa today may be less about control, and more about coordination. The ability to align interests, share risk and build ecosystems rather than empires.

Without that, scale remains fragile, no matter how much capital enters the system.

What listening at scale has taught me

I work in advertising, an industry often mistaken for being about messaging, when in reality it is about listening.

I’ve had the privilege of working with brands that speak to millions of people across African markets, cultures and income groups. That role creates a kind of proximity to everyday realities that is difficult to gain elsewhere. How people make choices, where trust breaks down, what they aspire to, and what they worry about.

Over time, patterns begin to emerge.

When brands succeed across markets, it’s rarely because of creativity alone. It’s because teams align around shared insight, collaborate across borders and execute with consistency and discipline. When brands fail, it’s almost always fragmentation, disconnected thinking, siloed leadership and competing priorities.

Working at that scale has challenged many of my own assumptions about leadership. It has made one thing clear, people across Africa are often more connected in their realities than the leaders and systems built to serve them.

Many partnerships struggle not because collaboration is impossible, but because accountability feels uncomfortable

That gap between lived experience and leadership behaviour is where collaboration quietly breaks down.

Collaboration isn’t soft, it’s something we’re still learning

We often talk about collaboration in Africa as a value, something cultural, aspirational even intuitive. But lived experience suggests it may be one of the hardest leadership disciplines we’ve yet to master.

Many partnerships struggle not because collaboration is impossible, but because accountability feels uncomfortable. Roles blur. Standards drift. Underperformance is tolerated in the name of harmony. Trust erodes quietly.

When collaboration works, it’s usually because leadership is clear, expectations are shared, and responsibility is taken seriously. Conditions we don’t always sustain consistently.

This tension is visible even in our most ambitious continental initiatives. Agreements are signed. Intent is declared. But execution often lags behind aspiration, not for lack of capability, but for lack of sustained, collective leadership attention.

Why collaboration often matters more than competition, for now

Competition has its place. In mature, integrated markets, it sharpens performance and drives innovation.

But in fragmented environments like many of ours, uncoordinated competition can dilute impact, splitting scarce talent, duplicating effort and slowing category development.

Collaboration, when done well, does something different. It pools capability, accelerates entry into new markets, builds resilience and strengthens credibility.

This isn’t an argument against competition. It’s an argument for sequence.

Collaboration helps build the market.

Competition then helps sharpen it.

At this stage of Africa’s development, collaboration may not be idealism at all, it may simply be pragmatic leadership.

Belief comes before scale

Underlying many of these challenges is belief. Not belief in individuals, but belief in collective African capability.

Too often, we look outward for validation before fully backing one another inwardly. Cross-border partnerships within Africa are treated as harder than partnerships across oceans. That mindset subtly reinforces dependency and delays confidence.

Belief changes behaviour. It shapes how willing we are to share, to trust, to take risks together.

Without it, collaboration remains rhetorical.

Choosing a different leadership posture

Africa doesn’t need more declarations about unity. Many of us already agree on the destination.

What may be required now is a shift in posture, a willingness to lead in ways that prioritise coordination over control, shared outcomes over individual wins, and long-term ecosystem building over short-term advantage.

The next phase of African growth is likely to be led by those willing to:

  • Think continent before country
  • Build coalitions rather than empires
  • Hold one another accountable within collaboration
  • See scale as something created together, not claimed alone

Capital will follow that kind of leadership. It always does.

Africa’s future won’t be determined by how much money arrives, but by how deliberately we choose to work together with what we already have.

Africa’s growth problem isn’t capital.

It’s leadership without collaboration and that’s something we can choose to change, together.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Leagas Delaney South Africa.

 

Business

Afreximbank Posts Robust Q1 2026 Results with 25% Growth in Net Income and Improved Profitability

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The results demonstrate continued resilience, disciplined balance sheet management and strong deal execution despite a challenging global operating environment

The growth in net interest income and profitability demonstrates the strength of our operating model and the continued relevance of our mandate

CAIRO, Egypt, May 22, 2026/APO Group/ –African Export-Import Bank (“Afreximbank” or the “Bank”) (www.Afreximbank.com) and its subsidiaries (the “Group”) announced its results for the three months ended 31 March 2026. The results demonstrate continued resilience, disciplined balance sheet management and strong deal execution despite a challenging global operating environment.

 

The Group continued to expand its lending activities in Q1 2026, resulting in total credit exposure growing by 2% to reach a portfolio of US$42 billion, up from US$41 billion as of 31 December 2025. This performance reflects Afreximbank’s leading role as a Development Finance Institution (DFI) in financing trade and trade-enabling infrastructure, and its strategic contribution to economic resilience across Africa and the Caribbean.

Average loans and advances for Q1 2026 stood at US$32 billion, up 8% compared to the same period in the prior year, driving the recorded growth in interest income. The Group’s liquidity position remained strong, with cash and cash equivalents of US$5.6 billion, representing 14% of total assets, consistent with FY2025 and above the Bank’s strategic minimum.

Asset quality also remained strong, with the non-performing loan (NPL) ratio at 2.40%, broadly in line with 2.43% at FY2025 and below industry average.

Shareholders’ funds increased to US$8.6 billion at 31 March 2026, up from US$8.4 billion at FY2025, supported by internally generated capital of US$268.9 million and new equity investments received during the quarter, underscoring the Bank’s continued ability to mobilise capital from its shareholders in support of its growth and development mandate.

The Group delivered strong profitability during the quarter.  Notwithstanding declining benchmark rates, total interest income rose by 14% year-on-year to reach US$813.6 million, while net interest income increased by 24% to US$510.0 million, compared with US$411.2 million in the first quarter of 2025. The Group’s cost-to-income ratio remained contained at 19%, well within the Group’s strategic ceiling of 30%. As a result, Profit for the period increased to US$268.9 million, up from US$215.4 million in Q1 2025.

The Group continued to maintain a strong capital position, with a capital adequacy ratio of 23% as at 31 March 2026, in line with the Bank’s long-term capital management targets.

During the quarter, Afreximbank continued to demonstrate its counter-cyclical role in response to external shocks. In March 2026, the Bank launched a US$10 billion Gulf Crisis Response Programme to help member countries mitigate adverse spillover effects from the Gulf crisis. The facility is designed to support liquidity, stabilise trade and payments, and address supply-side disruptions, particularly in energy, tourism and aviation, fertilisers, food and other critical imports.

The Bank also continued to deploy targeted financing and advisory support to strengthen trade flows, industrial capacity and economic resilience across Africa and CARICOM. Regional integration received further momentum following South Africa’s ratification of the Bank’s Establishment Agreement in February 2026, bringing one of Africa’s largest and most diversified economies into the Bank’s membership and giving the Bank full continental coverage.

Highlights of the results for Afreximbank Group are shown below:

Financial Performance Metrics

Q1’2026

Q1’2025

Gross Income (US$ million)

874.1

784.9

Net Income (US$ million)

268.9

215.4

Return on average equity (ROAE)

13%

12%

Return on average assets (ROAA)

2.62%

2.38%

Cost-to-income ratio

19%

16%

 

Financial Position Metrics

Q1’2026

FY’2025

Total Assets (US$ billion)

41.7

42.3

Total Liabilities (US$ billion)

33.0

33.9

Shareholders’ Funds (US$ billion)

8.6

8.4

Non-performing loans ratio (NPL)

2.40%

2.43%

Cash/Total assets

14%

14%

Capital Adequacy ratio (Basel II)

23%

          23%

 

Mr. Denys Denya, Afreximbank’s Senior Executive Vice President, commented:

“Against a backdrop of continued global uncertainty, heightened geopolitical risks and tight financial conditions, the Group delivered a resilient first-quarter performance, underpinned by disciplined balance sheet management, sound asset quality and strong capital and liquidity buffers. The growth in net interest income and profitability demonstrates the strength of our operating model and the continued relevance of our mandate. Our swift launch of the US$10 billion Gulf Crisis Response Programme further underscores Afreximbank’s counter-cyclical role in supporting member countries during periods of disruption. We remain focused on stabilising trade flows, easing liquidity pressures and advancing the industrial and economic transformation of Africa and the Caribbean.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Afreximbank.

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Via Licensing Alliance Expands Voice Codec Program with New Licensee, New Licensors, Publishes Comprehensive Pool Rate Structure

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Via Licensing Alliance

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES – Media OutReach Newswire – 22 May 2026 – Via Licensing Alliance (Via) today announced continued momentum for its Voice Codec patent pool, including the addition of a new unnamed licensee and new licensors, NovaVoice Limited and Cordial IP, further growing the program’s patent stack and market penetration from its initial five, large global licensors.

The addition of the new licensee, unnamed at this time, reflects growing industry adoption of the collaborative licensing pathway Via’s Voice Codec program creates for accessing IP rights to critical voice technologies. This addition reflects a growing market uptake of advanced voice technologies, including EVS and IVAS, driven by rising demand as 5G and 5G-Advanced technologies are adopted worldwide.

Additionally, Via continues to prioritize transparency and has published its full rate structure for the Voice Codec pool, providing further clarity and predictability for implementers and to the broader market. For implementers, the full rate structure allows for complete visibility as they consider the appropriate royalty structure to choose from to meet their product level costs, evaluate future growth paths for their product lines, or plan their geographical expansion plan needs. This level of disclosure not only reduces uncertainty in licensing decisions but also enables more consistent benchmarking, reinforcing confidence in fair, market-aligned SEP licensing practices. The program’s royalty rates are listed on Via’s website at https://www.via-la.com/licensing-programs/voice-codec/#license-fees.

The addition of the new licensors indicates increased interest from patent holders in licensing their voice technology SEPs through highly efficient, aggregated licensing vehicles such as patent pools. Future growth in both the licensor list and the number of patents consolidated through the pool license will continue to enhance the value of the Voice Codec License for implementers. Via’s Voice Codec program licensors are listed here: https://www.via-la.com/licensing-programs/voice-codec/#licensors.

Via’s Voice Codec pool covers Enhanced Voice Services (EVS), which supports voice communications across more than one billion and growing active devices globally, as well as Immersive Voice and Audio Services (IVAS), which will play a central role in next-generation voice and spatial audio applications.

“We are pleased to welcome these new entrants to our pool, which signal continued growth and momentum our Voice Codec program,” said Kevin Mack, President of Via Licensing Alliance. “This pool license offers strong value relative to other market options and represents the only collaborative licensing solution for EVS and IVAS technologies, making it a smart and efficient pathway for companies seeking to license critical voice capabilities.”

EVS remains a foundational technology for high-quality voice communications in 5G and 5G-Advanced networks, with adoption continuing to expand as 5G, 5G-Advanced and future network iterations reach global scale. As spatial audio and advanced voice technologies expand into 6G and a broader range of non-cellular devices, the importance of IVAS technologies is expected to increase, with Via’s pool offering an early and effective licensing pathway.

For more information about the Voice Codec patent pool, including information for prospective licensees, please visit https://www.via-la.com.

About Via Licensing Alliance:
Via Licensing Alliance is the collaborative licensing leader, dedicated to accelerating global technology adoption, fostering participation, and generating return on innovation with balanced licensing solutions for innovators and manufacturers of all sizes around the globe. Via has operated dozens of licensing programs for a variety of technologies. Via is an independently managed company owned by industry-leading participants with over 25 years of intellectual property licensing leadership. For more information about Via, please visit https://www.via-la.com.

 

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Joint statement welcoming the Republic of Togo’s announcement on Visa facilitation for African nationals

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Togo

The AfCFTA Secretariat and Afreximbank commend the Government and people of the Republic of Togo for hosting Biashara Afrika 2026 and for their continued commitment to advancing Africa’s economic integration agenda

LOMÉ, Togo, May 21, 2026/APO Group/ –The AfCFTA Secretariat and African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) (www.Afreximbank.com) welcome the announcement by the Government of the Republic of Togo, under the leadership of H.E. Faure Essozimna Gnassingbé, President of the Council of the Republic of Togo, regarding measures to facilitate visa-free entry for all nationals of African States holding valid passports, as announced by the Minister of Security on 18 May 2026.

The announcement was made in Lomé on the sidelines of Biashara Afrika 2026, the continent’s premier trade and business platform, which has brought together policymakers, private sector leaders, investors, and stakeholders from across Africa to advance dialogue on intra-African trade, investment, and regional integration.

Throughout the engagements, participants underscored the importance of facilitating the movement of African citizens, entrepreneurs, and investors as an important enabler of intra-African trade and economic cooperation. Against this backdrop, the announcement reflects the growing continental momentum towards strengthening connectivity and deepening African integration.

The AfCFTA Secretariat and Afreximbank, to which Togo is a State Party and a Member State, envision a continent where goods, services, capital, and people move more freely across borders in support of an integrated African market. Measures that facilitate mobility and connectivity continue to contribute towards advancing the broader mandate of both institutions; the attainment of the aspirations of Agenda 2063.

The AfCFTA Secretariat and Afreximbank commend the Government and people of the Republic of Togo for hosting Biashara Afrika 2026 and for their continued commitment to advancing Africa’s economic integration agenda.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Afreximbank.

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